A Government MP is pushing for a $30 million taxpayer bailout if a report finds auditors failed to spot a troubled council's spiralling debt problem.
Northland MP Mike Sabin is urging his Government colleagues to let Kaipara ratepayers off the hook for a large chunk of the council's $80 million debt, which was incurred without ratepayers' knowledge on an expanded sewerage scheme beside Mangawhai Harbour.
The secret 2006 decision to double the size of the scheme and increase the loan required from $31 million to $53 million led to the mass resignation of the former council, which was replaced by commissioners last year.
On Tuesday, Auditor-General Lynn Provost will release a long-delayed report on the council's management of the sewerage scheme. It is expected to examine the role of senior councillors and management, arrangements with contractors and other agencies and possibly other related issues, as the commissioners have described the sewerage scheme problems as "the tip of the iceberg".
A separate investigation by Auditing and Assurance Standards Board chairman Neil Cherry will examine the role played by the Auditor-General's business division, Audit New Zealand, which approved the council's accounts.